Washington: India faces "very significant challenges", in particular from China and its behaviour in the Line of Actual Control, the White House has said, said as it unveiled the Biden administration's first region-specific report on the strategic Indo-Pacific. The report on US's Indo-Pacific Strategy, released on Friday, outlines President Joe Biden's vision to firmly anchor the country's position in the Indo-Pacific, strengthen the region and support India's rise and regional leadership in the process.
"We will continue to build a strategic partnership in which the United States and India work together and through regional groupings to promote stability in South Asia; collaborate in new domains such as health, space, and cyberspace; deepen our economic and technology cooperation; and contribute to a free and open Indo-Pacific," the White House said.
"A free and open Indo-Pacific can only be achieved if we build collective capacity for a new age," the report said, underlining that the US will support "India's continued rise and regional leadership."
"We recognise that India is a like-minded partner and leader in South Asia and the Indian Ocean, active in and connected to Southeast Asia, a driving force of the Quad and other regional fora, and an engine for regional growth and development," the White House statement added. At a White House background briefing, a senior administration official, on condition of anonymity, pointed out that India was facing "significant challenges". India, the senior official said, is in a very different place, in many ways than Australia and other countries.
"But India faces very significant challenges. China's behaviour on the Line of Actual Control has had a galvanising impact on India. From our standpoint, we see tremendous opportunities in working with another democracy - with a country that has a maritime tradition that understands the importance of the global commons - to advance critical issues in the region, the senior administration official said.
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The border standoff between India and China in eastern Ladakh erupted on May 5, 2020, following a violent clash in the Pangong lake area and both sides gradually enhanced their deployment by rushing in tens of thousands of soldiers as well as heavy weaponry.
"There is tremendous appreciation of the importance and the challenges of strengthening the engagement with India and a recognition that India is a critical strategic partner, and a desire to continue building on the very good work of previous administrations to significantly broaden and deepen that relationship, the official said. The administration official made the candid observations while briefing reporters on the release of the new regional strategy.
The report says that the US will strengthen its relationships with leading regional partners, including India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Mongolia, New Zealand, Singapore, Taiwan, Vietnam, and the Pacific Islands. The official said the new Indo-Pacific strategy builds on the work of previous administrations and the broader consensus that has emerged on the importance of the Indo-Pacific region. "It argues that no region will be more vital to the United States in the future and that American security and prosperity fundamentally depend on that of the Indo-Pacific," the official said.